Posts tagged Black Scare

The Santa Cruz Sentinelinaccurately reported yesterday that the government District Attorney’s office had mounted a smash-and-grab raid on SubRosa Cafe, the Anarchist space in Santa Cruz that has been black-baited and scapegoated over the past month for a riot they had nothing in particular to do with. The situation in Santa Cruz got pretty scary, with SubRosa collective members receiving frequent harassment and death threats from Respectable Citizens. What actually did happen sounds here sounds worrying, but the SubRosa collective has made clear that the newspaper story is wildly inaccurate. There has been no raid so far — although there were four armed deputies dispatched to nose around on a pretty flimsy pretext:

Four armed deputies visited SubRosa Wednesday May 19th. SubRosa was closed
at the time. They told a neighbor they wanted to talk to SubRosa staff about
worker’s comp issues. One of the deputies was an inspector from the
Santa Cruz District Attorney’s Office.

Beyond this unsuccessful visit, SubRosa has not had any contact with law
enforcement. SubRosa was not raided, and our door was not broken. We did not,
and do not call the police.

SubRosa is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, and has no paid workers and is an
all-volunteer space. SubRosa has a business license to operate in the City Of
Santa Cruz. SubRosa is in compliance with all city and county fire codes, zoning
requirements, entertainment permits, health codes, workers compensation, and
sales tax requirements. No workers comp claims have been filed, nor have we
been contacted by the Division of Workers Compensation.

It sounds to me like the District Attorney’s office and the po-po would like to take the opportunity to go fishing for connections between SubRosa and the riot. Which is worrisome. Not the same thing as the raid the Sentinel spread sensationalistic rumors about — but still a reason to worry, and to offer your support and solidarity to SubRosa if you believe that they should not be threatened, attacked or harassed by the state’s armed goons solely on the basis of their political beliefs. If you’d like to support the SubRosa project, I’m sure they could use it these days;

Donations

SubRosa is fiscally sponsored by a 501(c)(3) non-profit and your donation is
tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. We will happily provide you with a
tax-deductible receipt.

We can accept donations by check, money order, or credit/debit card.

If you can’t make it down to SubRosa, one-time donations can be sent to:

Emily Bernard, a manager at Dell Williams Jewelers, was shocked by the event.

. . . While the police department has not publicly verified individuals or groups
that are involved except the two transients arrested . . ., it is investigating the
group of vandals as a possible anarchist organization.

Business owners and Santa Cruz community members alike
[1] are focusing their blame on SubRosa, an
anarchist café, partly because one of the men arrested admitted picking up fliers
for the event there.

We can’t let [an] anarchist café exist now that we know the potential of
what they can do and publicize, Bernard said.

I don’t know why Emily Bernard thinks that the existence of an anarchist café should be subject to her personal sufferance. She manages a business, but she doesn’t own downtown Santa Cruz. SubRosa pays their rent to a landowner who is willing to have them, and they have as much of a right to be there as anybody else. But in any case, the SubRosa community space is being scapegoated, harassed, and targeted by other business owners for eradication, for no other reason than the fact that they are Anarchists.

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radgeek.com is a long-running weblog written by Charles W. Johnson,
an individualist anarchist writer living and working in Auburn, Alabama. [more]

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Post Footnotes

[1]Sic —
The article is operating on a rather selective notion of who counts as a Santa Cruz community member (apparently Johanna Isaacson, Simone Chandler, and other Santa Cruz residents who support, or are part of, the SubRosa collective, don’t count). ↩